Gothic Mourning and Daughterly Duty in Jay Macpherson's

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Gothic Mourning and Daughterly Duty in Jay Macpherson's Document généré le 27 sept. 2021 04:51 Studies in Canadian Literature / Études en littérature canadienne "Absence, havoc": Gothic Mourning and Daughterly Duty in Jay Macpherson’s Welcoming Disaster Tanis MacDonald Volume 34, numéro 1, 2009 URI : https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/scl34_1art04 Aller au sommaire du numéro Éditeur(s) The University of New Brunswick ISSN 0380-6995 (imprimé) 1718-7850 (numérique) Découvrir la revue Citer cet article MacDonald, T. (2009). "Absence, havoc":: Gothic Mourning and Daughterly Duty in Jay Macpherson’s Welcoming Disaster. Studies in Canadian Literature / Études en littérature canadienne, 34(1), 58–80. All rights reserved © Management Futures, 2009 Ce document est protégé par la loi sur le droit d’auteur. L’utilisation des services d’Érudit (y compris la reproduction) est assujettie à sa politique d’utilisation que vous pouvez consulter en ligne. https://apropos.erudit.org/fr/usagers/politique-dutilisation/ Cet article est diffusé et préservé par Érudit. Érudit est un consortium interuniversitaire sans but lucratif composé de l’Université de Montréal, l’Université Laval et l’Université du Québec à Montréal. Il a pour mission la promotion et la valorisation de la recherche. https://www.erudit.org/fr/ “Absence, havoc”: Gothic Mourning and Daughterly Duty in Jay Macpherson’s Welcoming Disaster Tanis MacDonald Absence, havoc — well, I missed you — Near and dear turned far and strange, Dayshine came disguised as midnight: One thing altered made all change. Fallen? stolen? trapped? entangled? To a lower world betrayed? Endless error held your footsteps, On your brow a deepening shade. Long I sought you, late I found you, Straying on the farther shore: You indeed? A swaying phantom Fades, that flickered on before. Lost, no rescue: only dreams our Wandered, wandered loves restore. — “Absence, Havoc” Welcoming Disaster (67)1 anadian poet Jay Macpherson’s 1974 book of poetry, Welcoming Disaster, was originally published as a sixty-three- page chapbook of short lyric monologues spoken by a female Cpersona. The text is divided into five sections that describe the narrator’s reactions to the loss of her creative powers, preceded and presaged by the disappearance of a paternal magus figure. But Welcoming Disaster remains something of a textual enigma; it has received little critical attention since its publication, even though Macpherson’s previous book, The Boatman, won the Governor-General’s Award for Poetry in 1957. Lorraine Weir, in her thoughtful 1989 monograph, notes that critical discussion of Macpherson’s work is “sparse, occasionally gener- ous, but always incomplete” (“Jay”180). David Bromwich asserts that “Macpherson’s more ambitious poems have been elegiac,” in particular Jay Macpherson 59 those that “lament . an alienated and/or repressed element of the self” (336). About Welcoming Disaster, W.J. Keith assures readers that the text “reveals hints (like The Waste Land, we might add) of a palpable if subtly personal trauma” (32), while Suniti Namjoshi calls it an exploration of “the world of nightmare” (55). Michael Hornyansky points out the text’s “ominous simplicities” and calls Macpherson’s prosody “a very curious blend of the cryptic, the elliptic, and the conversational” (337). Suffice it to say that Welcoming Disaster has baffled many read- ers, with the result that Macpherson’s anthologized work has been drawn almost exclusively from The Boatman. Welcoming Disaster has received only a fraction of the critical attention that it deserves as a poetic sequence, as a feminist text, and as part of the Gothic tradition in Canada. Margaret Atwood, who, as Macpherson’s former student at the University of Toronto, acquired at least some of her sense of the Gothic tradition from Macpherson, asserts that Welcoming Disaster is “more convoluted, darker and more grotesque” than The Boatman (“Jay” 410). Asserting that the text resonates with “echoes of all those nine- teenth-century ghosts, from Catherine Earnshaw on down” and with “vampiristic or sinister-double relationships” and “Faustian pacts with darkness,” Atwood emphasizes Macpherson’s use of the Gothic “lore of magicians, ghouls, mazes and crossroads” (410). Certainly the iconic illustrations in Welcoming Disaster invite a Gothic reading. “Conjuring the Dead” is accompanied by a reproduction of the woodcut from the 1620 quarto of Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus, showing the scientist in his learned robes raising the devil, though significantly, the Welcoming Disaster emblem shows only Faustus brandishing his book within his charmed circle (66). Later in the text, “The Dark Side” is adorned with a gravestone memento mori, a grinning death’s head, decorated with cherubs, bats, and an ourobouros in the background, taken from a 1776 Puritan headstone in Massachusetts (PTT 81; see also Weir, “Jay” 205). When Atwood writes that the poems in Welcoming Disaster “make the hair stand up on the back of your neck” (411), she does not specify whether this effect is a result of fear or admiration, but I suspect both reactions are applicable, and appropriate. One of the hair-raising qualities of these poems is the omnipresence (or lurking “omniabsence”) of the dead. Indeed, the dead in Welcoming Disaster seem to proliferate at an alarming, nearly geometric rate, per- haps because the protagonist insists upon the “closed communion, pact 60 Scl/Élc profound” between the dead and the living. Macpherson writes this relationship as morbidly satisfying on one level, but also acknowledges that it remains frustrating enough to leave the speaker “stupid — cum- bering the ground” (“Conjuring the Dead,” PTT 66).2 Although she has conjured them, the dead react in good elegiac fashion; they do not stay in contact with her, but neither do they have the decency to vanish. Corpses languish in cellars, in graves, in ruined castles, in lost books, in cinema seats, in coffins, and behind locked doors, haunted by the poems’ protagonist, she who craves union with the dead in gen- eral, and with one “wandering love” in particular. If we are to consider Welcoming Disaster a wittily melancholic blend of Gothic and elegiac traditions that work towards feminist concerns, thinking about the tim- ing of publication is also important. Macpherson wrote this text in the years after her success with The Boatman, in the early 1970s as feminist theory was emerging in Europe and while younger Canadian poets like Atwood, Gwendolyn MacEwen, and Susan Musgrave (to name only a few) were beginning to modernize the Gothic with feminist concerns, a project that still is very much in currency. In their 2007 collection Postfeminist Gothic, Benjamin A. Brabon and Stéphanie Genz assert that “the Gothic has always resisted a monological definition and exceeded the laws of genre and categorical thinking” (1), adding that scholars of both Gothic and feminist literature must “now demand a self-criti- cism with respect to their own totalizing gestures and assumptions” (7). Justin D. Edwards’s recent study Gothic Canada works with a wary eye on those same totalizing gestures when he proposes that Canadian Gothic literature struggles with “the grip of an ambivalent impulse that arises equally from a wish to a counter wish, from attraction to repul- sion,” between the colonizing impulse and the wish to escape the force of colonization, creating “an obsessive mindset, in which Canadian writers continually return to ghostly figures who haunt” (xxi). Though Edwards’s Gothic Canada does not concentrate on feminist texts, I sug- gest that Macpherson’s Welcoming Disaster is another such obsessive Gothic text of subjectivity, but with an emphasis upon the female sub- ject rather than the colonial or postcolonial subject. 3 Using not only Gothic motifs but also a Gothic structure, Welcoming Disaster inquires into the gender dynamics of elegiac convention and explores the possibilities for renewed, and renewable, female subjectivity. Though the text of Welcoming Disaster is rendered entirely, and remark- Jay Macpherson 61 ably, in sapphics, ballads, and other verse forms, the narrative describes that of a traditional Gothic novel, parsed here with its attendant “mis- leading clues, postponements of discovery, [and] excessive digressions” by Claire Kahane: Within an imprisoning structure, a protagonist, typically a young woman whose mother has died, is compelled to seek out the centre of a mystery, while vague and usually sexual threats to her person from some powerful male figure hover on the periphery of her con- sciousness. She penetrates the obscure recesses of a vast laby- rinthean space and discovers a secret room sealed off by its associa- tion with death. In this dark, secret centre of the Gothic structure, the boundaries of life and death themselves seem confused. Who died? Has there been a murder? Or merely a disappearance? (334) This description, so accurate and yet so tongue-in-cheek, points to the standard features of a Gothic plot while suggesting that the enigmas of the tradition invite subversion, and further, that the questions that fuel the Gothic novel are potentially strong enough to crack the structure itself. Kahane is not alone in drawing attention to the fact that the “female gothic” has grown beyond the confines of Ellen Moer’s defin- ition in Literary Women (1976). While a poetic sequence is not and never will be a novel — nor should it attempt to be — Macpherson’s sequence shows a surprising amount of correlation with, and witty subversion of, Kahane’s description, suggesting, as Brabon and Genz
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